I’m curious to what the acquisition price was. Bun said they’ve raised $26 million so I’m assuming the price tag has to be a lot higher than that for investors to agree to an acquisition.
I asked GitHub if they could change my username to one that was already taken. As long as the account does not have repos of their own and was deemed sufficiently inactive they can take it.
The support staff approved my request, but I have friends who’ve gotten declined.
I've actually had a (great) username completely blackholed by github. I'm still a bit salty about it.
I had received an email several years ago informing me that it was going to be removed. They gave me the equivalent to a coupon for a free year of the github personal plan as compensation.
To this day it'll tell you that the username is "unavailable" if you try to sign up with it, and the page just 404s.
As charcircuit figured out, the username is/was `malware`. They deactivated it in 2018 without any explanation, and even my contacts at Github at the time couldn't quite figure out why it was happening.
My only thought was that it was during the MSFT acquisition due diligence, and my username was an unfortunate victim of whatever compliance requirements they had to satisfy.
Honestly the url does not look good. I can see why they wouldn't want it showing up in logs or across the internet. Maybe it was getting hit by virus scanners or other Internet filtering as well.
> I created my account two years ago in anticipation of being able to open-source more code and I wanted to reserve my name; I had a couple of forked repos but that's it.
Same experience for me. 3 years ago I was able to claim an inactive username (the actual process was that you filed a complaint about an inactive user, they renamed the account, then said "it's available now, good luck you better be quick", so it was not an official transfer process).
Tried again about 12 months ago for a different username/org and was told this is no longer possible.
Yeah, sounds like GitHub doesn't let people squat usernames.
The author says GitHub can 'modify his repos at will', but earlier he says he doesn't even have any repos besides a few forks (which were likely not modified)
The problem was that this process was handled very poorly by their support team years ago. No notification or any kind of communication with the original owner. What seemed to you inactive could have been still an active user. This happened to me. It seems that after the Microsoft acquisition things may have improved and they don’t enforce the name squatting policy as easily as before.
That happened to me too, I was able to secure our organization's name that way. There was someone squatting on it, and it could have caused potential problems if they started uploading code. From what I recall about the process, it was pretty straightforward - I sent an email and just a few minutes later, I had the username linked to me.
Same here, not sure if they still list it but GitHub had a name-squatting policy on their site, and after referencing that in an email to support, requesting a username of someone who only had a handful of repos about 8 years ago, they released the username to the public so I could switch to it.
I did this (request an inactive name) for a username many years ago, which led to people scraping my personal email from commits, and using information I used in my readme to contact me and ask for it. “It’s my real name” and other stories.
I almost gave it away the first time, but the person wouldn’t provide proof of it being their name. Future requests made me realize it was just a coveted username
For me (United States) the pricing for songs is inaccurate if relying on iTunes. A single song is actually $1.29, and from what I sampled full albums are typically $12.99. Definitely a cool idea that could be expanded on!
I’ve had others recommend Forest Mims books before.
I tried to read the “Getting Started in Electronics” but the notebook style to it makes it difficult for me to read for much time. Content is still very great for beginners.
I don’t know, I guess it depends on location and such. I work as a C++ dev with computer vision related stuff. I have an ok salary and very flexible working conditions. And I haven’t seen any web related jobs in my region which seem technologically more interesting.
You are correct about number of job openings though..
I'll second this, I work as a low level C dev on embedded stuff. Good salary for the region, company pays embedded software devs at the same rate as high level app and web devs, and have somewhat flexible working conditions. This is just an anecdote I know, but I am very surprised at the general consensus at how bad the embedded positions are, it hasn't been my experience or my peers at least.